Why Central American Migrants Are Arriving at the U.S. Border

El Salvador. The country has seen a considerable drop in gang violence, and President Nayib Bukele is widely suspected of negotiating a truce with the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) gang to reduce homicides. To help families struggling with the pandemic-induced economic recession, Bukele oversaw the administration of generous subsidies for 1.5 million households. However, his disregard for democratic checks and balances has concerned opposition and civil society groups, and put him at odds with U.S. President Joe Biden’s intention of strengthening democracy in Central America.

Honduras. President Juan Orlando Hernandez is under investigation by U.S. authorities for suspected ties to drug trafficking organizations, which have contributed to the country’s high rates of violence. Additionally, his government is implicated in graft involving hurricane relief, raising doubts about the future of the U.S.-Honduras relationship and the potential for collaboration on migration.

What are Biden’s policies toward the region?
President Biden’s approach largely relies on reviving policies that were starting to show success late in the tenure of President Barack Obama, as well as undoing unhelpful policies by President Donald J. Trump’s administration.

The Obama administration increased U.S. assistance to the Northern Triangle to $750 million in a bid to address the root causes of migration following a 2014 uptick in asylum claims by unaccompanied minors. Those efforts were beginning to bear fruit, with homicides dropping in the region’s most dangerous neighborhoods and internationally supported anticorruption commissions [PDF] making strides in holding venal officials to account. Biden, then the vice president, became the Obama administration’s de facto envoy to the region and oversaw its U.S. Strategy for Central America.

In 2019, the Trump administration froze that assistance over regional governments’ purported failures to curb migration, and progress on addressing the drivers of migration was halted. Senior Trump administration officials rhetorically undermined good governance in the region, siding with deeply compromised political leadership in exchange for symbolic cooperation on migration. The administration’s closure of the U.S. southern border and disruptions to the U.S. asylum system reduced cross-border migrant flows temporarily, but Trump’s policies failed to alleviate the pressures to migrate.

The Biden administration is now seeking $4 billion to put development, security, and anticorruption efforts back on track. This assistance would be directed to civil society organizations, reform-minded public institutions, and vulnerable communities with the aim of reducing poverty, curbing violence, and building climate resilience. Government-to-government aid would be strictly conditioned on the implementation of anticorruption measures. Such targeted assistance would likely not bear immediate results but represents the only enduring option to reduce irregular migration from the region. And today, the administration named a special envoy for the Northern Triangle, Ricardo Zuniga, to work with regional governments and other partners to curb unauthorized migration and carry out Biden’s $4 billion plan.

Meanwhile, Biden is reactivating the U.S. asylum system to ensure compliance with international law. In addition to processing asylum claims from unaccompanied minors, some families, and individuals waiting in Mexico under the Migrant Protection Protocols, his administration restarted the Central American Minors program, which allows at-risk youth to apply for U.S. asylum from their home countries instead of applying only after making the dangerous journey to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Paul J. Angelo is a fellow for Latin America Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR).This article is published courtesy of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR).